'<:j;;;;': ,:, ::\; , t , ; ,f: t,<: . . '. . , ' . j ' .A " ;;:::': wt .J ni1t1ìIIffI , <" ,;0;, ",. '" ",',' ",", .", ", " :':::;:It::,,.. "iû t , .. ' , ""'ì ..,"',': /:"<% i :,,:,;; ' ':;:: ;'" , ' ^'" ',,' \ :,'" : """, ":': , ' ; , : , l , , : , : , ' . :, , : : , . ; , ' , ;: : ' : ' , ": " :::: ' -, ( f:it.;..: {.:::.::::":,:.:: " THE NEW YORKER , ... . <' : ,;'\ " 'ij , , ," '", ",' l, ';1, ..:::. ' ::" . \d, ,:: / " y ". '. i:': /ii': . ,, .,.'::': rfi : ':l, , --.... . f:.' " ""'::' .,,;. " '@, [ ":,,,,'à .,",..,',:,;,'.:' 1; ,:', '.&..,'..',.. ',' , I .. r,::;:> : :-::: :. ....,: k . :;....:. . .;,. : ::::.:. : :::::::::::::::::...:.:.. '.;.;:.:::::.::::':":,::: .:. '" :(: :t;;J#:'< " j { . '.: :. . ., . :::: lJ: ï ,.:::: '" .: -;.: ), x. . :" ; . ..'...' 't " , ' ,v .. . . ' ::;) , , } -A ': , $. } ': i' -, m?, t <" '" , ,,": t:.. " :,' " ! i,:-- þ-' : ;; :.:;: ,.:" , t::, t",,^i<(,,: ':-: .:-'...."'::::::-::' iii2Yf:' f '; "' .. .. . ..".'. ..:...... ,::.;. ;,., ',.. .). '.:-:' " ;' :::"":;';;':" 1'" ,. .::: ;::', ': '!; .:.. --.. , :'Lr::5 t,::: :f. ....) ... .... .' :: i::11f[r' , .. :.:i : : _:, ::?'':'it ...' , :::-..:X..;.... . /;" ::;, "'.,':' : ,? Vi: ,,;: . <,:" : :: "ß ::.:.' :.' : .:::.::':.'..: , 4 ,,::f ,:':'" "i:,:':,: :": . (( F'ellow Kirldies. )) . . No. 139: An act to amend the conser- vation law in relation to the sale of muskellunge. Struck out. No. 140: An act to amend the conser- vation law in relation to the sale of cot- tontail rabbits and varying hares. Laid aside. The Senate then adjourned. Out- side, the fifty state troopers still were on duty, alert and stern. Our reporter learned this guard was to be increased next day to one hundred. Wrong Number O DR item about King Levinsky, the fighter, and the eclipse re- minded a gentleman of what happened when Kid Norfolk, the colored fighter, encountered a radio for the first time. It was back in the early days of radio, and in the old Madison Square Gar- den. The Kid had just won his fight and waS escorted to the micro- phone. Sorely pU7z1ed, he stared at it a moment and then shouted, "He 1- ;( U:s::"::il :::::::j:.." i:':::':"'::':,'::"<:<': ':'W:W2 ,".'w'<v_ :::': ..- ,,)H f! ' f" : '>;; ::::'r: ;-;;"' rii,i"":-Î ""':<i :::'ì' i. h'<" " "" .'. , ' , " :- ." , ' , ' (: :: j . :? ''' I ' "".. . .: ". :..... :.:,'-C:" . .., ;j:; JJ ::;wc' ,,"" ::%ff -. :/.-.-.- ::r:::' .... --: , :;::,:"" " f$ .:. .." ? "": ":",,, :L,; " . .....:::.: ..: ::: . ;:L , . :i t ::. : 1l > ;;",) l :j ,>' 10!" After an attentive pause he de- manded, "Who dar?" No Admittance T HIS story about Secretary Woodin has nothing to do with the present fix, which pleases us just as well. It's about what happened to him way last fall, shortly after the Democrats had taken up their headquarters in the Bil t- more. Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Farley had kind of made appointments with everybody in town; that is, they would say to people they shook hands with, " D . ." A 1 rop In any tIme. s a resu t, hundreds of people kept coming to the main door of the headquarters and the huck of getting rid of them fell upon the official guardian of the door, Sena- tor Wild Bin ("Two-Gun") Lyons. At the beginning, money was pretty tight, and one week nobody knew just where the salaries for the workers were gOIng to come from. Mr. Woodin, 9 hearing of this, sent word that he would contribute ten thou- sand dollars, and an appoint- ment was made for him to see the chairman of the finance committee on a certain Wed- nesday at the Biltmore head- quarters. Wednesday waned and died and no Woodin; so did Thursday and Friday. On Saturday, a telegram arrived at headquarters from Mr. Woodin, saying that he had been to the Biltmore f 0 u r times and that the doorman wouldn't let him in, so could he please have a passr They must have sent him one; any- way, he finally got in. " "\ A.mateur Jockey P ETE BOSTWICK'S great am- bition is to win the Grand National, which he hopes to do next week, in his twenty- third year, either upon Kells- boro' Jack, which belongs to his aunt, Mrs. Ambrose Clark, or upon John Hay Whitney's Dusty Foot. At this writing, it seems more likely that he will rid e the latter. The Aintree race is the most dan- gerous in the world, and just his meat. He has been in England several months, getting acquainted with the course, the climate, the people, and everything else. Bostwick is one of the few young men left in this country who can devote all their time to horses. A bit of air- planing, a natural but secondary in- terest in parties, girls, and social life- and the rest is horses. He has been pretty much that way since he was seven. He began riding then. Later, he was at St. Paul's School, but he put that foolishness pretty well out of hIS mind. He has spent much more time in the stables of his Uncle Ambrose than in classrooms. He practically grew up in them. He's been steeple- chasing since he was sixteen, when he rode in the United Hunts. He did so well then that he was allowed an ama- teur rider's certificate the next year by the National Steeplechase & Hunt Association, although he was a year under the age limit. He's popu1ar with the professionals, because when he's around the tracks, he's one of them and speaks the race-track ver- nacular , which features verbs in the present tense. He's approximately